"Despite originally forming in 1986, The Grand Manifestation is the first full-length offering from Swedish five-piece Third Storm. After just two years and a handful of shows, Third Storm’s original line-up disbanded. It was not until 2014 that founding member, Heval Bozarslan, gathered a new band around him, releasing the Taritiya Me EP a year later. "Despite its Mayhem-inspired cover and the howling winds and distant siren that open the EP, it is not a black metal offering. Some promising-sounding death groove is short-lived and gives way to medium-paced, funeral doom, which dominates most of the 25-minute runtime. Which Third Stormwould be on display on The Grand Manifestation—the anticipated black metal, the groove-laden death that made a brief cameo or the sludgy doom that predominated?" Precious metals sampler.[Give in to your anger...]

"New York City is a strange dichotomy. Depending on who you ask, you'll either get mental pictures of Broadway musicals, jazz concerts, the colorfully decorative Times Square, and shopping centers and skyscrapers within a stone's throw of each other... or you'll get a grim story of the rampant drug use and homelessness, its long history of violent crimes, and the hopelessness and gritty realities of its citizens that birthed the city's rap, hardcore, and metal scenes. The thing is, either story would be correct. On their third full-length, Vile Luxury, Imperial Triumphant paints a vivid picture of their city's duality: shimmering and powerful, yet simultaneously ugly and brutal." The big apple is rotten to the core. [Give in to your anger...]

"Obscura is flat out the most influential technical death metal album ever written. Steeve Hurdle and Luc Lemay's paradigm-establishing use of dissonance and deliberate composition drew up an instant classic almost de novo. If ever a death metal album was divinely inspired, Obscura was, and once this box was opened, there was never a chance of resealing its contents." The birth of evolution.[Give in to your anger...]

"It's heartening to see musicians still figuring out the formulas and successfully imprinting their own identity on what is unquestionably the world's greatest form of music. And in that vein, it's time to unsheathe your wallet and supplicate the hard-earned fiat currency of your worldly region before Apocrophex." A penny for the prog-death. [Give in to your anger...]

"Californian upstarts Skeletal Remains is a solid exponent of old school death, worshiping early '90s (mostly) American death like Christians cherish the Bible." Remains of the death day.[Give in to your anger...]

"Ever since zombies killed his dog in 2007, Will Smith has been dealing with his grief in the healthy way: by gurgling, screaming, and howling his way across New York's underground metal scene. Many will be familiar with his work in Buckshot Facelift and Artificial Brain, and his talents are just as well displayed in Afterbirth." Rage therapy.[Give in to your anger...]

"Sabbath Assembly have been gifting us with music firmly entrenched in eerie discomfort since 2009. In the early years, their releases centered upon the teachings of the Process Church of the Final Judgement, which made them disturbing to the point of near-inaccessibility. In what was a positive career move, the band decided not to regale us with further hippy cult weirdness on 2015’s self-titled release, instead focusing on pure occult songs, resulting in an excellent album that catapulted the band (in our eyes at least) to the top of the occult rock food chain." Self-cleaning coven.[Give in to your anger...]

"With the release of Labyrinth Constellation in 2014, New York's Artificial Brain won themselves an immediate following of fans and critics alike, myself included. With a shudder and a scream, Labyrinth Constellation pulled me by the throat out into a borderless realm of cavernous sci-fi horror as bizarre as it was enticing. The album managed to feel vast without losing the down-to-earth grit of death metal, and even among other Gorguts-influenced groups, Artificial Brain had created a unique sound and a fantastic debut. Following that up will be difficult." Upgrade or system error?[Give in to your anger...]

"Between pillaging, plundering, and getting insanely hammered, Mark Z. interview's Revocation's Dan Gargiulo." The first of several plunder publications from this year's 70,000 Tons of Metal excursion.[Give in to your anger...]

"Chicago has a busy music scene, and I can hardly be bothered to go to shows even when bands I already like are playing, so there are plenty of cool second city bands that I've always heard of but never checked out. One such familiar name is Without Waves, an experimental/prog metal/rock outfit set to release their third album, Lunar, into a crowded field of new music this March 17th." In a crowded field, is this brutal enough?[Give in to your anger...]